The outer-inner city: urbanization, migration and 'race' in London and New York

被引:4
作者
Millington, Gareth [1 ]
机构
[1] Roehampton Univ, Dept Social Sci, London, England
关键词
inner city; immigration; suburbs; London; New York; race; gentrification;
D O I
10.1080/17535069.2012.656447
中图分类号
TU98 [区域规划、城乡规划];
学科分类号
0814 ; 082803 ; 0833 ;
摘要
This article explores the emergence of 'outer-inner cities' located on the periphery of London and New York. As traditional 'zones in transitions' and inner city districts of both cities have gentrified, these neighbourhoods no longer offer an affordable entry point to the low-waged immigrants whose work is necessary to keep the global city working. Moreover neoliberal practices of immigrant and working class dispersal in addition to the manipulation of fear regarding the ethnic and 'racial' other and the threat of deportation exert considerable centrifugal pressure making the central an increasingly hostile environment for immigrants. As such devalued sections of the periphery, such as suburbs suffering from disinvestment, are emerging as unlikely meeting points for new immigrants, those displaced from the central city and descendents of previous waves of suburbanisation. Common to both forms of inner city is the racialization of antagonistic community relations. Yet in contrast to the 'inner city' of the Fordist metropolis the outer-inner city is more fragmented, characterized by informal and flexible arrangements of labour and dwelling and most crucially lacks symbolic resonance on a government and policy level.
引用
收藏
页码:6 / 25
页数:20
相关论文
共 114 条
[71]  
Millington G., Racism, community, place: Inside the ethnoscapes of Southend-on-Sea, (2006)
[72]  
Millington G., From bedsit-land to 'cultural hub': regenerating Southend-on-sea, London's turning: The prospect of Thames Gateway, pp. 209-226, (2008)
[73]  
Millington G., Racism, class ethos and place: the value of context in narratives about asylum seekers, Sociological Review, 58, 3, pp. 361-380, (2010)
[74]  
Millington G., Race', culture and the right to the city: Centres, peripheries, margins, (2011)
[75]  
Minton A., Ground control: Fear and happiness in the 21st century city, (2009)
[76]  
Miyares I.M., Wyly E.K., From exclusionary covenant to ethnic hyperdiversity in Jackson Heights, Queens, Geographical Review, 94, 4, pp. 462-483, (2004)
[77]  
Mollenkopf J.H., Castells M., Dual city: Restructuring New York, (1991)
[78]  
Mullard C., Black Britain, (1973)
[79]  
Newman K., Wyly E.K., The right to stay put, revisited: gentrification and resistance to displacement in New York City, Urban Studies, 43, 1, pp. 23-57, (2006)
[80]  
Patterson S., Dark strangers, (1963)